HomeAfricaOpposition candidate concedes defeat to Wadagni in Benin presidential race

Opposition candidate concedes defeat to Wadagni in Benin presidential race

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COTONOU, April 13 (Reuters) - The sole ‌opposition candidate in Benin's presidential election, Paul Hounkpe, has conceded defeat ​to Finance Minister Romuald Wadagni following the vote in the West African country, state television reported on Monday.

A ⁠49-year-old former Deloitte executive, Wadagni nL8N40M0M5 is the chosen successor of outgoing President Patrice Talon and had the backing of the ruling coalition in Sunday's election, which took place four ​months after the government was nearly toppled in a coup attempt nL6N3XE0R9.

The opposition candidate, Paul Hounkpe of the ‌Cowry Forces for an Emerging Benin party, acknowledged his defeat in a statement on Monday before provisional results were announced, according to a social media post by the state television network.

Wadagni was ⁠the overwhelming favourite after the main opposition party, The Democrats, failed to ⁠get enough lawmakers to sponsor a candidate of its own and did not back Hounkpe.

SECURITY AND POVERTY ARE KEY CHALLENGES

Wadagni will come under pressure to bolster the country's defences in the north, which faces a growing threat from jihadist groups based in the central Sahel.

The disgruntled ‌soldiers who staged the December coup attempt said they were partly motivated by deteriorating security ⁠conditions there.

"A stable transition in Benin is important not only ‌for the country itself but also for the broader West ​Africa region, given the political instability caused by successive coups in the Sahel," said Heni Nsaibia, senior West Africa analyst for Armed Conflict Location & Event Data (ACLED), a conflict monitoring group.

"It ‌is therefore especially necessary to focus efforts on stabilizing the ​north, preventing further upheaval, and demonstrating a ⁠model of stability for the broader region."

Wadagni has also vowed to deliver ‌on bread-and-butter issues like expanding access to clean ⁠water, expanding social security programmes and guaranteeing emergency healthcare regardless of ability to pay.

On the campaign trail, Hounkpe said high-profile tourism projects and impressive GDP growth under Talon and Wadagni had ​not improved the lives of ‌most people.  

He has also decried what he described as a climate of fear as political space ⁠for the opposition shrinks, with the ruling ​coalition holding every seat in the National Assembly.

(Reporting by Pulcherie Adjoha; Writing by Robbie ​Corey-BouletEditing by Bate Felix and Keith Weir)

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